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A NTP Server connects to a computer network with the purpose of synchronising all computers, routers and other devices to the exact same time. NTP servers use Network Time Protocol to adjust the drift of different machines to match the reference time.

NTP servers rely on using a reference clock; most networks that use a NTP server will use a UTC (Coordinated Universal Time) time source. UTC is based on the time told by the incredibly accurate and expensive atomic clocks.

Atomic clocks work on the principle that a single atom (in most cases the caesium -133) will resonate at an exact rate at certain energy levels. The accuracy of atomic clocks is so proficient that UTC was developed to allow international Atomic Time (TAI) and Greenwich Meantime (GMT) to be combined, allowing for the slowing of the Earth’s rotation by adding leap seconds and therefore keeping the Sun at the Earth’s meridian at noon.

Failure to account for this slowing in the Earth’s spin would result in the eventual drift of day and night (albeit in many millennia).
A NTP server can be set to receive a UTC time signal from across the Internet although these can vary tremendously in accuracy and are reliant on reasonably close distances from client and server.

Relying on an Internet based timing references can also leave a network open to malicious users as they can not utilise NTP authentication which is a security measure used to ensure a timing reference is what it says it is.

Many dedicated NTP servers are designed to receive a more accurate and authenticated timing reference. One method utilises radio transmissions that are broadcast by several national physics laboratories such as NIST (National Institute for Standards and Technology) in the US (WWVB signal) and NPL (National Physical Laboratory) in the UK (MSF signal). These signals are broadcast in long wave and can be picked up within the broadcast area although the signals can be blocked by local geographical features.

Another method to receive a UTC timing reference is to use the onboard atomic clocks on GPS (Global Positioning System) network. While GPS is most commonly known as a positioning system the satellite actually relays timing information which is used by GPS receivers to calculate the time it has travelled and therefore the distance.
While the GPS signals are not broadcast in UTC format they are highly accurate and NTP has no problem in converting them.

The NTP server checks the time stamp from the UTC source and uses the information to calculate if the network clocks are drifting and adds or subtracts a second to match the reference clock. The NTP server will do this at set intervals, normally every fifteen minutes to ensure perfect accuracy.

NTP is accurate to within 1/100th of a second (10 milliseconds) over the public Internet and can perform even better over LANs and WANS with accuracies of 1/5000th of a second (200 microseconds) not unheard of.

To ensure further accuracy the NTP service (or daemon on Linux) runs in the background and does not believe the time it is told until after several exchanges and each one has passed a protocol specification (a test), the server is then considered. It usually takes about five good samples) until a NTP server is accepted as a timing source.

NTP (network time protocol) is an Internet protocol. Protocols are simply a set of instructions that a computer will follow and NTP has been designed and developed to synchronize computer networks.

It was developed in the 1985 by Professor David Mills from the University of Delaware when the Internet was still in its infancy. Professor Mills realised the need for synchronisation amongst computers when they were talking to each other.

NTP uses Marzullo’s Algorithm which is an agreement algorithm used to select sources for estimating accurate time from a number of noisy time sources. NTP works by distributing a single time source. Whilst this time reference can be anything such as a wrist watch, it makes little sense to synchronise a network to anything other than UTC time.

UTC (Coordinated Universal Time) is a global time scale based on the time told by atomic clocks. Atomic clocks boast such high levels of accuracy that they do not lose or gain a second in over a million years.

By synchronizing to a UTC time source a network can in affect be synchronised to every other network that uses UTC time.

Once a time source has been selected the NTP daemon (or service on Windows) not only distributes the time reference it also continually checks for accuracy and errors.

NTP is a hierarchical system. The distance from a time server is referred to as a stratum level. A stratum 0 server is a time source itself such as an atomic clock, a stratum 1 server is the NTP time server whilst a stratum 2 server is a device that receives the time from the time server and stratum 3 servers receive the time signal via a stratum 2 server.

Arranging the network into strata means that a NTP time server can distribute time to hundreds or even thousands of machines without the network or time server itself becoming congested with traffic. Although it must be noted that the lower down the stratum level a device a fall in accuracy can be expected.

The actual UTC time signal can be received from a number of ways. From across the Internet although this can cause security issues as the time signal can’t be authenticated which is NTP’s inbuilt security measure. It is far safer to receive a time signal from a radio signal broadcast by several national physics laboratories or even the GPS network whose onboard atomic clocks can be utilised as a timing source if the NTP time server is fitted with a GPS receiver.

The NTP server is an integral part of the modern computer network. Without Network Time Protocol and NTP time servers many of the modern functionality of computers that we take for granted such as online reservation, Internet trading and satellite communication would be impossible.

Synchronisation in computers is dealt with by NTP. NTP and NTP servers use a single time reference to synchronise all machines on a network to that time. This time reference could in fact be anything such as the time on a wrist watch perhaps. However, synchronisation is pointless unless a UTC (coordinated universal time) time source is used as UTC has been developed to allow the whole world to synchronise to the same time, allowing truly global synchronisation.

UTC is based on the time told by atomic clocks although compensation measures such as Leap Seconds are added to UTC to keep it inline with Greenwich Meantime (GMT).

Atomic clocks are very expensive and extremely delicate pieces of equipment and not the sort of thing that can be housed in the office server room. Fortunately a NTP server can receive a UTC time source from several different locations.

The Internet is perhaps the most widely used source of time references. Unfortunately however, there are draw backs in using the Internet for a timing source. Firstly the Internet timing sources can’t be authenticated. Authentication is a security measure used by NTP to check that timing source is genuine. Secondly, to use an Internet timing reference means a hole has to be left open in the network’s firewall, again compromising security. Thirdly, Internet timing sources are notoriously inaccurate and those that aren’t can often be too far away from a client to provide any useful precision.

However, if security and high level of accuracy to UTC time is not required then the Internet can provide a simple and affordable solution.

A far more secure method of receiving a UTC timing reference is to use the specialist national time and frequency transmission broadcast by several countries. The UK (MSF), USA (WWVB), Germany (DCF) and Japan (JJY) all boast a long wave timing signal. While these signals are limited in range and strength, where available they make an ideal timing source as the radio receiver can pick these signals up from inside a building. These transmissions can also be authenticated providing a high level of security.

The third and perhaps simplest solution is to use a GPS NTP server. These use the signals sent from the Global Positioning System which contains timing information. This is ideal as the GPS signal can be received literally anywhere in the world so if there is no radio transmission your area then the GPS network will provide a secure and authenticated solution.

The only downside to GPS is that an antenna has to have a good view of the sky and therefore need to be positioned on the roof. This obviously has logistical drawbacks if the server room is in the basement of a sky-scraper.

In selecting a timing source, the most important thing to remember is where the NTP server is going to be situated. If it is indoors and there is no opportunity to run and antenna to the roof then the radio transmissions would be the best alternative. If there are no radio transmission in your country/area or the signals are blocked by local topography then the GPS is an ideal solution.

However, if accuracy and security are not an issue then the Internet would be the most obvious solution.

A NTP GPS Server is a type of time server that uses Network Time Protocol (NTP) as a method for synchronizing the time on network devices and computers after receiving a time signal from he GPS network.

The GPS (Global Positioning System) network is a constellation of satellites owned and operated by the USA military. Most people are aware of GPS as an aid for satellite navigation. In actual fact, the basis of the transmissions broadcast by the GPS satellites is a time signal. This time signal is generated by the satellite’s onboard atomic clock. It is this information that a satellite navigation system receives and calculates by triangulation the distance away from the satellites.

This timing signal is what is used by a NTP GPS server as a reference to synchronize a network too. NTP then distributes this time to all routers and computers on that network.

A NTP GPS server comprises of a GPS receiver, GPS antenna and NTP software. The GPS antenna should be situated on a rooftop which will give the best possibility of receiving the transmissions from the satellites.

The GPS receiver then converts this information into timing information that can be read and distributed by NTP.

While the atomic clocks onboard the GPS satellites do not transmit a UTC timing code (Coordinated Universal Time). However, NTP has the ability to convert the atomic clock from the satellites to UTC. This allows computer networks to be synchronized to the same universal time source no matter where they are in the world.

Using a dedicated NTP GPS server a network can be synchronized to within a few milliseconds of UTC time with accuracies of a few hundred nanoseconds made possible over LAN’s.

Computer networks rely on timekeeping for nearly all their applications, from sending an email to saving data, a timestamp is necessary for computer to keep track. All routers and switches need to run at the same rate, out of sync devices can lead to data being lost and even entire connections.

All PC’s and networking devices use clocks to maintain an internal system time. These clocks, called Real Time Clock chips (RTC) provide time and date information. The chips are battery backed so that even during power outages, they can maintain time.

However, personal computers are not designed to be perfect clocks, their design has been optimized for mass production and low-cost rather than maintaining accurate time. However, these internal clocks are prone to drift and although for many application this can be quite adequate, often machines need to work together on a network and if the computers drift at different rates the computers will become out of sync with each other and problems can arise particularly with time sensitive transactions.

For some transactions it is necessary for computers to be perfectly synchronised, even a few seconds difference between machines can have serious effects, such as finding an airline ticket you had booked had been sold moments later to another customer or you could draw your savings out of a cash machine and when your account is empty you could quickly going to another machine and withdraw it all again.

Time servers are like other computer servers in the sense they are usually located on a network. A time server gathers timing information, usually from an external hardware source and then synchronises the network to that time.

Most time servers use NTP (Network Time Protocol) which is one of the Internet’s oldest protocols still used, invented by Dr David Mills from the University of Delaware, it has been in utilized since 1985. NTP is a protocol designed to synchronize the clocks on computers and networks across the Internet or Local Area Networks (LANs).

NTP utilises an external timing reference and then synchronises all devices on the network to that time.

Often time servers are synchronised to a UTC (Coordinated Universal time) source which is the global standard time scale and allows computers all over the world to synchronised to exactly the same time. This has obvious importance in industries where exact timing is crucial such as the stock exchange or airline industry.

There are various sources that a time server can use as a timing reference. The Internet is an obvious source, however, internet timing references from the Internet such as nist.gov and windows.time can not be authenticated, leaving the time server and therefore the network vulnerable to security threats.

The way a computer deals with time is totally different to the ways humans perceive it. We arrange time into seconds, minutes, hours, days, weeks, months and years, while computers on the other hand arrange time as a single number representing the seconds that have passed from a single point in time, known as the prime epoch.

Most computers use NTP (Network Time Protocol) to deal with time and on networks many are synchronised using a dedicated NTP time server. NTP knows nothing about days, years or centuries, only the seconds from the prime epoch. This prime epoch is set (for most systems) at midnight at the turn of the century twentieth century that for a human would be recorded as something like: 00:00 – 01,01,1900.

Computers, however, count time as the number of seconds past this point. If a computer was around in 1900 its timestamp on midnight January 1 would be 0 while in 1972 at the same date the timestamp would be 2,272,060,800, which represents the number of seconds since 1900.

The timestamps restart every 136 years with the next wrap around due in 2036, this has caused uneasiness amongst some who fear a Millennium Bug type scenario, although most doubt such events would occur, however, when a wrap-around of the timestamp does happen an era integer will be added (+1), to allow computers to deal with time spans that cover more than one wrap-around. If computers and NTP need to deal with time that spans before the prime epoch a negative integer is used (for the year 1500 a -3 will be used to represent three cycles of 136 years).

Timestamps are used in virtually every transaction that modern computers are tasked to do such as sending emails, debugging and programming. Because time is linear, a computer knows that each timestamp is always greater than the previous one and therefore computers and NTP find it difficult to deal with inaccuracies in time, particularly when time suddenly appears to go backwards.

This can happen if computers are not synchronised to the same time. If an email is sent to a machine with a slower clock, it appears to the computer to have been received before it has been sent. Lack of synchronisation can serious problems and can even leave a system vulnerable to malicious attacks and even fraud.

Because of this, most computer networks are synchronised to UTC (Coordinated Universal Time). UTC is a global timescale and the same for everybody worldwide it is based on the time told by atomic clocks which are highly accurate, neither gaining nor losing a second in millions of years.

Most computer networks use a dedicated NTP time server to receive a UTC time to synchronise their computers too. UTC is available from across the Internet (although unsecured), via the GPS network (Global Positioning System), or by receiving national time and frequency broadcasts via long wave.

NTP synchronises a computer by checking the received UTC time and adding to or holding a computer’s timestamp until it perfectly matches UTC. By using a dedicated NTP time server UTC can be maintained on a network to a few milliseconds of UTC time.

Computer networking is one of the most difficult aspects of information and communications technology (ICT). The logistics of connecting terminals, routers, printers and all the other devices can leave many administrators with a constant headache.

One of the most important aspects that often gets overlooked and can have disastrous consequences is that of time synchronization.

It is imperative that all devices on a network are telling the same time as timestamps, the format a computer relays time to each other, are the only form of reference a computer can use to establish a sequence of events. If different machines on a network are telling different times then unforeseen consequences such as emails arriving before they have technically been sent and other anomalies will make the administrator’s headache even worse.

What’s more a computer network that is not synchronized is open to security threats and even fraud. Fortunately the NTP time server has been around for many years and can ease the headache of time synchronization .

NTP (Network Time Protocol) is one of the oldest protocols used by computer networks. Developed nearly three decades ago NTP is a protocol that checks the time on all devices on network and adds or subtracts enough time to ensure they are all synchronized.

NTP requires a time reference to synchronise the network’s clocks to. Whilst NTP can synchronize a network to any time an authoritative time source is obviously the best solution. UTC (Coordinated Universal Time) is a globally used timescale based on the time told by atomic clocks. As atomic clocks lose less than a second of time in over a thousand years, UTC is by far the best timing source to synchronize a network to. Not only will your network be perfectly synchronized together but also your network will be synchronized to the same time as millions of computer networks all from around the world.

A NTP server can receive a UTC time reference from several sources. The Internet is the most obvious source, however Internet timing sources are notoriously inaccurate and those that are not can be relatively useless if the distance is too far away. Also having placed your NTP server securely behind your firewall it does seem pointless to have to keep a hole open in it to allow the NTP server to poll the timing reference from across the web and leave the entire network vulnerable, particularly as NTP authentication (NTP’s own security measure) is not possible over the Internet.

There are two far more secure and accurate methods of receiving a UTC timing reference. The first is to utilise the national time and frequency transmissions that several countries broadcast from their national physics laboratories. These are usually broadcast via long wave which has an advantage of being able to be picked up inside a server room although many countries do not have such a signal.

However, many NTP servers can utilize the timing signal broadcast by the onboard atomic clocks of the GPS (Global Positioning System) satellites. This signal is available everywhere but a GPS antenna is required that can get a clear view of the sky.

By utilizing a UTC timing source either through the GPS network of radio transmission a computer network can be synchronized to within a few milliseconds of UTC time.

The GPS (Global Positioning System) is a Global Navigational Satellite System (GNSS) controlled and run by the United States of America.

GNSS systems work by using satellites several thousand miles above the Earth’s surface that beam timing information down to a GNSS receiver (like the satellite navigation unit in our cars). It is this information that is used by the GPS receiver to triangulate an exact position. They can only do this by having onboard their own highly accurate atomic clock as the distance the satellites are away from the Earth, even an inaccuracy of a second or two could mean a sat navigation’s location could be miles out.

As a consequence of having this accurate time sources, GPS and the new breed of GNSS systems can all be used to receive an absolute or UTC (Universal Coordinated Time) time source. This time source can be used by computer networks running a NTP server (Network Time Protocol) to synchronise all machines and devices to the same time.

NTP is a protocol designed to synchronise computers and network devices to an external timing reference.

GPS is an ideal time and frequency reference because it can provide highly accurate time anywhere in the world using relatively cheap components. Each GPS satellite transmits in two frequencies L2 for the military use and L1 for use by civilians transmitted at 1575 MHz, Low-cost GPS antennas and receivers are now widely available and dedicated NTP GPS servers are now relatively low cost.

The radio signal transmitted by the satellite can pass through windows but can be blocked by buildings so the ideal location for a GPS antenna is on a rooftop with a good view of the sky. The more satellites it can receive from the better the signal. However, roof-mounted antennas can be prone to lighting strikes or other voltage surges so a suppressor is highly recommend being installed inline on the GPS cable.

A NTP GPS Server is ideal in providing NTP time servers or stand-alone computers with a highly accurate external reference for synchronisation. Even with relatively low cost equipment, accuracy of hundred nanoseconds (a nanosecond = a billionth of a second) can be reasonably achieved using GPS as an external reference.

The way a computer deals with time is totally different to the ways humans perceive it. We arrange time into seconds, minutes, hours, days, weeks, months and years, while computers on the other hand arrange time as a single number representing the seconds that have passed from a single point in time, known as the prime epoch.

Most computers use NTP (Network Time Protocol) to deal with time and on networks many are synchronised using a dedicated NTP time server. NTP knows nothing about days, years or centuries, only the seconds from the prime epoch. This prime epoch is set (for most systems) at midnight at the turn of the century twentieth century that for a human would be recorded as something like: 00:00 – 01,01,1900.

Computers, however, count time as the number of seconds past this point. If a computer was around in 1900 its timestamp on midnight January 1 would be 0 while in 1972 at the same date the timestamp would be 2,272,060,800, which represents the number of seconds since 1900.

The timestamps restart every 136 years with the next wrap around due in 2036, this has caused uneasiness amongst some who fear a Millennium Bug type scenario, although most doubt such events would occur, however, when a wrap-around of the timestamp does happen an era integer will be added (+1), to allow computers to deal with time spans that cover more than one wrap-around. If computers and NTP need to deal with time that spans before the prime epoch a negative integer is used (for the year 1500 a -3 will be used to represent three cycles of 136 years).

Timestamps are used in virtually every transaction that modern computers are tasked to do such as sending emails, debugging and programming. Because time is linear, a computer knows that each timestamp is always greater than the previous one and therefore computers and NTP find it difficult to deal with inaccuracies in time, particularly when time suddenly appears to go backwards.

This can happen if computers are not synchronised to the same time. If an email is sent to a machine with a slower clock, it appears to the computer to have been received before it has been sent. Lack of synchronisation can serious problems and can even leave a system vulnerable to malicious attacks and even fraud.

Because of this, most computer networks are synchronised to UTC (Coordinated Universal Time). UTC is a global timescale and the same for everybody worldwide it is based on the time told by atomic clocks which are highly accurate, neither gaining nor losing a second in millions of years.

Most computer networks use a dedicated NTP time server to receive a UTC time to synchronise their computers too. UTC is available from across the Internet (although unsecured), via the GPS network (Global Positioning System), or by receiving national time and frequency broadcasts via long wave.

NTP synchronises a computer by checking the received UTC time and adding to or holding a computer’s timestamp until it perfectly matches UTC. By using a dedicated NTP time server UTC can be maintained on a network to a few milliseconds of UTC time.

We are all used to Satellite Navigation by now. More and more people are installing those little black boxes into their cars and throwing away their old paper road maps. The advantages of satellite navigation are many fold – from constant updates keeping the maps current to being able to pin point your location miles from any landmarks or road signs but GPS has more uses than merely triangulating a position for direction finding, it can be utilized to provide time and frequency information worldwide.

Since the early 1990’s the Global Positioning system (GPS) has been the worlds’ only fully functioning Global Navigational Satellite System (GNSS). Run by the American military, GPS (sometimes referred to as NAVSTAR) has allowed accurate timing and location finding all over the world.

To accurately pinpoint a location, all GNSS systems require an absolute time source, that is a time source as accurate as humanely possible such as that from an atomic clock. Without knowing exactly what the time is a GNSS satellite would not be able to accurately pin point a location (as the Earth, satellites and people are all moving about a location can only be defined by a position and time). Because of the distance of the satellites away from the Earth, even an inaccuracy of a second or two could mean a sat nav’s location could be miles out.

For this reason each satellite has a highly accurate atomic clock onboard which can also be used by NTP (Network Time Protocol) servers to synchronise computer networks. GPS is an ideal time and frequency source because it can provide highly accurate time anywhere in the world using relatively cheap components.

A GPS receiver decodes the signal sent from the GPS antenna to a computer readable protocol which can be utilised by most time servers and operating systems including, Windows, LINUX and UNIX.

The GPS receiver also outputs a precise pulse every second that GPS NTP servers and computer time servers may utilise to provide ultra-precise timing. The pulse-per-second timing on most receivers is accurate to within 0.001 of a second of UTC (Coordinated Universal Time or Temps Universel Coordonné).

GPS is ideal in providing NTP time servers or stand-alone computers with a highly accurate external reference for synchronisation. Even with relatively low cost equipment, accuracy of hundred nanoseconds (a nanosecond = a billionth of a second) can be reasonably achieved using GPS as an external reference.

In 2002, the European Space Agency and European Union agreed to build Europe’s own GNSS called Galileo. To compete with the new and more advanced GNSS technologies the GPS programme is currently being upgraded and it is expected that when Galileo begins relaying signals both systems will become interoperable allowing even more accuracy in timing and positioning.